Senate Majority Leader Mitch McConnell told reporters Tuesday the Senate would not take up legislation that would retard President Trump’s designed tariffs on aluminum and steel since Trump would not sign it.

“The suspicion that the boss would sign a check that would remove actions he’s taken strikes me as remote, at best,” McConnell, R-Ky., pronounced after a closed-door assembly with Republicans and Vice President Mike Pence. “I’d like to use building time in the Senate for things that actually have a possibility to turn law. So we consider it’s rarely doubtful we’d be traffic with that in a legislative way.”

McConnell pronounced senators bay “a lot of concern” about the tariffs and the impact on the economy.

They are trying to change Trump to slight the tariff proposals even serve than the stream ostracism of Mexico and Canada.

“A series of members have been flattering outspoken about it and continue to speak to the administration in the hopes that at the end, this is rather a narrowed routine rather than a extended application,” McConnell said.